CT artist tries to break boundaries in art, nature

CT artist tries to break boundaries in art, nature

In Genesis, God divides dark and night, earth and sea, then gives Adam the job of naming Eden’s creatures.

In Ursula K. Le Guin’s 1985 short story “She Unnames Them,” Eve, dissatisfied with the arbitrariness of the whole set-up, frees the birds and beasts from Adam’s labeling. Nobody really minds.

“Without names, we can’t communicate,” Prosek said at the Westport Library last week. “But it can create these separations.”

Prosek — acclaimed as an artist, writer and naturalist — gave the Caryl & Edna Haskins lecture for the Aspetuck Land Trust, which serves the towns of Westport, Weston, Easton, Fairfield and Monroe. It was the first time the land trust held a public event since the COVID-19 pandemic began, and the library’s lecture space was nearly full for Prosek’s talk.

Easton Artist, Author, Naturalist to Speak at Westport Library - Easton Courier

Easton Artist, Author, Naturalist to Speak at Westport Library - Easton Courier

James Prosek, who grew up in Easton, will give a talk about his art and the need to protect the beauty of our natural. Prosek’s talk “Trespassing and Conservation,” will be held on April 6 at 7 p.m. at the Westport Library Forum will draw attention to the beauty of our natural world while urging us to protect, conserve and connect our lands restoring a healthy ecosystem for all.

Aspetuck Land Trust Adds 95 Acres in the Past Month to its Open Space Reserves

Aspetuck Land Trust Adds 95 Acres in the Past Month to its Open Space Reserves

Weston, CT - Aspetuck Land Trust reports the great news that this week it closed on a property -- one it had been working to attain for 10 year. It is the the 10-acre Montanaro property show in the attached map.

"As you can see, it is located in a critical spot — a doughnut hole in the Weston Wilton Forest Reserve," shared ALT Executive Director David Brant. "If the planned two large houses had been built there, cars and trucks would have driven right through one of our oldest preserves, 119-acre Honey Hill."

Easton Courier Op-Ed: South Park Property Acquisition

Easton Courier Op-Ed: South Park Property Acquisition

Last week you may have received a pamphlet from Citizens for Responsible Government (CRG) about Aspetuck Land Trust’s (ALT) proposed purchase of 18.6 acres of the 29.5- acre South Park property owned by the Town of Easton. We’d like to offer a few clarifications.

ALT’s mission is the preservation and conservation of open space for the benefit and education of the public and future generations. Founded in 1966 as a nonprofit member-supported organization, we have already conserved 1,450 acres in Easton. ALT’s interest is solely in saving the land, not in local politics.